The most disappointing part of my experience was not the bench itself, but the complete lack of transparency and honesty from management throughout the process.
After being hired, I was repeatedly reassured that the company was “actively looking” for a suitable project and that opportunities were coming soon. In reality, months passed with little to no meaningful communication, no concrete plan, and constant vague promises that never materialized.
What made the situation particularly frustrating was the feeling of being systematically misled instead of being treated with honesty and professionalism. Rather than having a direct conversation about the actual business situation, management chose to maintain false optimism while leaving employees in prolonged uncertainty and insecurity.
Being kept on the bench for months with no real direction creates significant stress, damages confidence, and leaves you feeling professionally disposable. The environment ultimately felt less like a company investing in people and more like a body-shop model where employees become invisible the moment there is no immediate client demand.
There are talented people inside the company, but the way bench management and communication are handled is deeply problematic and, frankly, emotionally exhausting.
I would strongly advise candidates to ask very direct questions about:
project allocation stability
bench policy
internal mobility
and how long employees realistically remain unassigned.